| Faith Wilding on Wed, 7 Jan 1998 07:33:56 +0100 (MET) |
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| <nettime> Where is feminism in cyberfeminism |
Where is Feminism in Cyberfeminism?
Faith Wilding
Introduction
"What is cyberfeminism? Sadie Plant claims it is an absolutely post-human
insurrection -the revolt of an emergent system which includes women and
computers, against the world view and material reality of a patriarchy which
still seeks to subdue them. This is an alliance of 'the goods' against their
masters, an alliance of woman and machines. It is a revolt of the chattels."
--Caroline Bassett, With a little help from Our (New) Friends?
During the recent Cyberfeminist International (CI) meetings at Documenta X in
Kassel, Germany (1), much discussion centered on whether or not there
should--or could--be a definition of cyberfeminism. FACES (a women only
on-line list) had been debating this issue with varying degrees of passion for
months; the press and other interested parties wanted to know; we, the
participants, wanted to know. The chance to talk about this important issue
face to face was invaluable since this perplexing question lies at the heart
of many of the contradictory contemporary positions and attitudes toward
feminism(s) on-line, which need to be addressed if there is to be an engaged
(cyber)feminist politics implemented on the Net. By looking more closely at
the reasons put forth against defining cyberfeminism, and their implications,
and by offering some possible definitions of cyberfeminism, I hope to suggest
how such a politics might be translated into practice. The impetus for this
essay springs from the experience of eight days of intense daily living and
working with almost forty women participants of the 1st Cyberfeminist
International. The daily collective interactions, discussions, presentations,
meals, work, and play, represented a browser through which possible practices
of a cyberfeminist movement became visible. The women present understood this
to be a significant historic moment; subsequent on-line discussions and
planning are adding to the evidence that much research and development still
lie ahead.
Against Definition
"The 1st CYBERFEMINIST INTERNATIONAL slips through the traps of definition
with different attitudes towards art, culture, theory, politics, communication
and technology--the terrain of the Internet."
--1st CI Press
Release
Some definitions of cyberfeminism have already been offered in the writings
and art practices of Sadie Plant, VNS Matrix, Linda Dement, Rosi Braidotti,
Alluquere Rosanne Stone, and others. Why then this preoccupation with
definitions of cyberfeminism in the CI discussions? The reasons given for
refusing to define cyberfeminism--even though they may call themselves
cyberfeminists--indicate a profound ambivalence in many wired women's
relationship to what they perceive to be a monumental past feminist history,
theory and practice, and its relevance to contemporary conditions facing women
immersed in technology. I will discuss four of the main manifestations of this
ambivalence and explore their implications.
1. Repudiation of "old style" (70's ) feminism.
According to this argument,"old style" (70's) feminism is characterized as
constricting (politically correct), guilt inducing, essentialist,
anti-technology, anti-sex, and not relevant to women's circumstances in the
new technologies. This is ironic because in actual practice cyberfeminism has
already adopted many of the strategies of avant garde feminist movements,
including strategic separatism (women only lists, self-help, chat groups,
networks, and woman to woman technological training), feminist cultural,
social, and language theory and analysis, creation of new images of women on
the Net (feminist avatars, cyborgs, genderfusion) to counter rampant sexist
stereotyping, feminist net critique, strategic essentialism, and the like. The
repudiation of historical feminism is problematic because it throws out the
baby with the bathwater and aligns itself uneasily with popular fears,
stereotypes, and misconceptions about feminism.
Why is it that so many younger women (and men) know so little about
even very recent histories of women, not to speak of past feminist movements
and philosophies? It is tempting to point the finger at educational systems
and institutions which still treat the histories of women, minoritarian, and
marginalized populations as ancillary to "regular" history, relegating them to
specialized courses or departments. In the US, young women entering college
often blithely claim equality with men declaring that feminism isn't needed
anymore--in complete disregard of the fact that the very structures of the
institutions are masculinist; that what counts as the main body of knowledge
to be conveyed is still almost entirely white, male, and western European;
that the new technology departments springing up everywhere are heavily male
dominated (2); and that women professors still are less likely to be tenured,
tenure-track, or full-time, and often still make less than male professors at
comparable ranks. And all of this despite the fact that as a recognized field
of knowledge and study, feminism and gender studies are firmly established in
academia.
But the problems lie deeper than the education systems. The political
work of building a movement is a technology which must be learned by study and
practice and needs the help of experienced practicioners. The struggle to keep
practices and histories of resistance alive today is harder in the face of a
commodity culture which thrives on novelty, speed, obsolescence, evanescence,
virtuality, simulation, and utopian promises of technology. Commodity culture
is forever young and makes even the recent past appear remote and mythic. On a
recent panel a young woman said that 70's feminism has taken on mythical
proportions for her generation, making the prospect of measuring up to such a
history overwhelming for her and her peers. Conversely, many older feminists
are unsure of how to connect to the issues of new media generations, and how
to go about translating feminist ideas to the information culture. The problem
for younger women then, becomes one of how to create a feminist politics and
activist trajectory of their own to address new cultural and technological
conditions and experiences.
To be sure, the problem of the loss of historical knowledge and active
connection to radical movements of the past is one which is not limited to
feminism--it is an endemic problem for leftist movements in the US. By
arguing for the importance of the knowledge of history I am not interested in
invoking nostalgic homage to moments of past glory. If cyberfeminists wish to
avoid making the mistakes of past feminists, it behooves them to know and
analyze feminist histories very carefully. And if they are to expand their
territory on the Net and negotiate issues of difference across generational,
economic, educational, racial, national, and experiential boundaries, they
must seek out coalitions and alliances with diverse groups of women involved
in the integrated circuit of global technologies. At the same time, close
familiarity with postcolonial studies, and with the histories of imperialist
and colonialist domination--and resistance to them--are equally important for
an informed practice of cyberfeminist politics.
2. Cybergrrl-ism.
Judging by a quick net browse, one of the most popular feminist avatars
currently offered to young women on the Net is "cybergrrl-ism" in all of its
permutations: "webgrrls", "riot grrls", "guerrilla girls", "bad grrls", etc.
As Rosi Braidotti (3) and others have pointed out, the often ironical,
parodic, humorous, passionate, angry, or aggressive work of many of these
recent "grrrl" groups is an important manifestation of new feminine
subjective and cultural representations in cyberspace. Currently there is
quite a wide variety of articulations of feminist and protofeminist practices
in these various 'groups' which seem to range from "anyone female can join"
chatty mailing lists, to sci-fi, cyberpunk, and femporn zines;
anti-discrimination projects; sexual exhibitionism; transgender
experimentation; lesbian separatism; medical self-help; artistic
self-promotion; job and dating services; and just plain mouthing off.
Cybergrrl-ism generally seems to subscribe to a certain amount of net
utopianism--an "anything you wanna be and do in cyberspace is cool" attitude.
Despite the gripings against men in general--and technogeeks in
particular--which pervade some of the discussions and sites, most cybergrrls
don't seem interested in engaging in a political critique of women's position
on the Net--they'd rather "just do it", and adopt the somewhat anti-theory
attitude which seems to prevail currently.
While cybergrrls sometimes draw (whether consciously or unconsciously)
on feminist analyses of popular representations of women--and on the
strategies and work of many feminist artists--they also often uncritically
recirculate and re-present sexist and stereotyped images of women from popular
media--the buxom gun moll; the supersexed cyborg femme; the 50's tupperware
cartoon women, are favorites--without any analysis or critical
recontextualization. Creating more positive and complex images of women which
break the gendered codes prevailing on the Net (and in the popular media)
takes many smart heads, and there is richly suggestive feminist research
available, ranging from Haraway's monstrous cyborgs, Judith Butler's gender
masquerade, Octavia Butler's recombinant genders, and all manner of hybrid
beings which can unsettle the old masculine/feminine binaries.
The many lines of flight of cybergrrl-ism are important as vectors of
investigation, research, and invention. But these can't replace the hard work
which is needed in order to identify and change the masculinist structures,
content, and effects of the new technologies. If it is true, as Sadie Plant
argues that "women have not merely had a minor part to play in the emergence
of the digital machines.....(that) women have been the simulators, assemblers,
and programmers of the digital machines."(4) then why are there so few women
in visible positions of leadership in the electronic world? Why are women
programmers and hackers still a tiny minority, and often considered anomalies?
Why is the popular perception still that women are generally anti-tech, and at
best secondary players in the high tech world? Sadly, the lesson of Ada
Lovelace is that even though women have made major contributions to the
invention of computers and computer programming, it hasn't changed the
perception--or reality--of women's condition in the new technologies. Being
bad grrls on the Internet is not going to change matters much either, nor
challenge the status quo, though it may provide refreshing moments of
iconoclastic delirium. But if grrrl energy and invention were to be coupled
with engaged political savvy and practice.....Imagine!
3. Net utopianism
Many cyberfeminists feel that the e-media are completely new technologies
which give women a chance to start afresh, create new languages, programs,
platforms, images, fluid identities and multi-subject definitions--that in
fact, the e-media can be recoded, redesigned, reprogrammed to meet women's
need and desire to change the feminine condition. This variety of net
utopianism declares that the choice is yours in cyberspace--you can be
anything you want to be--and refuses to be pinned down to definitions which
might imply a fixed set of beliefs, practices, or responsibilities or a fixed
subject position. As has been noted in a previous essay (5) there is much to
be said for considering cyberfeminism a promising new wave of feminist
practice which can contest technologically complex territories, and chart new
ground for women. It is of utmost importance however to recognize that the new
media exist within a social framework that is already established in its
practices and embedded in economic, political and cultural environments which
are still deeply sexist, and racist. Contrary to the fond delusions of many
net utopians, information exchange on the Net does not automatically
obliterate hierarchies through free exchange of information across boundaries.
Also, the Net is not a utopia of nongender, it is not a free space ready for
colonization without regard to bodies, sex, age, economics, social class, or
race. Despite the indisputable groundbreaking contributions by women to the
invention and development of computing technology, today's Internet is a
contested zone historically originated as a system to serve war technologies,
and is currently part of masculinist institutions. Any new possibilities
imagined within the Net must first acknowledge and fully take into account the
implications of its founding formations and present political conditions. This
being so, it can be seen as a radical act to insert the word feminism into
cyber space, to interrupt the flow of masculine codes by boldly declaring the
intention to bastardize, hybridize, provoke, and infect the male order of
things by politicizing the environment of the Net. It is people who can become
politicized, not machines, though they may be enlisted as allies in our
conspiracies. Feminism has always implied dangerous disruptions, covert and
overt action, war on patriarchal beliefs, traditions, social structures.
Cyberfeminism can model a brash disruptive politics which aims to dismantle
the patriarchal conditions which produce the codes, languages, images, and
structures of the Net.
4. Fear of political engagement
Another ambivalence about defining cyberfeminsm is the fear of forced
political consensus, the fear that discussions will be closed and differences
elided. Perhaps by refusing definition, regressive identity politics and
party lines, political squabbling, and ideological formulations can be
avoided. As a playful counter to the desire for definition, and as a
provocation to the press, the CI composed and posted the "100 Anti-theses" (a
parody of Martin Luther's theses) which "defined" cyberfeminism by saying what
it is not. This definition by negation or absence was an attractive means for
engaging conversation, piqueing curiosity, and engaging in language play--and
it was certainly fun as a collective writing project. But one cannot describe
something by saying what it is not, and once the playful point is made, it's
clear that the 100 antitheses are too abstract, ambiguous, and evasive to
function as an organizing strategy politically. While there are many
cyberfeminists who are developing extremely sophisticated feminist theories of
language, subjectivity, the body, technology, and female representation in
cyberspace, there is little understanding of how these theories link to the
mundane realities of diverse women's work and experiences on the Net - much
less how they could translate into a transformation of net practices and
structures. During the CI discussions at Documenta X, and subsequently
on-line, it has become more and more evident that current conditions of Net
politics and cyberspace demand more than playfulness if cyberfeminism is to be
a force in critiquing Net policy, structure, hierarchies, access, and the
effects of new technologies and technoscience on women. Arriving at definition
is itself part of an emergent practice, for definitions will shift and
complexify as practice becomes more complex. Definition can be a declaration
of solidarity with those engaged in justice struggles and "freedom projects"
(6) everywhere. Cyberfeminists have too much at stake to be frightened off
tough political strategizing and action by the fear of squabbles,
ideologizing, and political differences. If I'd rather be a cyberfeminist than
a goddess, I'd damned well better know why, and be willing to say so.
Definition as a political strategy
Linking the terms "cyber" and "feminism" produces a crucial new formation in
the history of feminism(s) and of the e-media. Each part of the term
necessarily modifies the meaning of the other. "Feminism" (or more properly,
"feminisms") has been understood as a historical--and
contemporary--transnational movement for justice and freedom for women, which
depends on women's activist participation in networked local, national, and
international groups. It focuses on the material, political, emotional,
sexual, and psychic conditions arising from women's differentialized social
construction and gender roles. Link this with "cyber", which means to steer,
govern, control (especially automated systems), and we conjure up feminism at
the helm: New political, social, and cultural possibilities which are quite
staggering. "CyberfeminismS" (7) can link the historical and philosophical
practices of feminism to contemporary feminist projects and networks both on
and off the Net, and to the material lives and experiences of women in the New
World Order, however differently they are manifested in different countries,
among different classes and races. If feminism is to be adequate to its
cyberpotential then it must mutate to keep up with the shifting complexities
of social realities and life conditions as they are changed by the profound
impact communications technologies and technoscience have on all our lives. It
is up to cyberfeminists to use feminist theoretical insights and strategic
tools and join them with cybertechniques to battle the very real sexism,
racism, and militarism encoded in the software and hardware of the Net, thus
politicizing this environment.
While refusing definition seems like an attractive, non-hierarchical,
anti-identity tactic, it in fact plays into the hands of those who would
prefer a net quietism: Give a few lucky women computers to play with and
they'll shut up and stop complaining. This attitude is one of which
cyberfeminists should be extremely wary and critical. Access to the Internet
is still a privilege, and by no means to be regarded as a universal right (nor
is it necessarily useful or desirable for everyone). While brilliant consumer
marketing has suceeded in making ownership of a PC seem as imperative as
having a telephone, computers are in fact powerful tools possession of which
can provide a political advantage (the personal computer is the political
computer). If the Internet is increasingly the channel through which many
people (in the overdeveloped nations) get the bulk of their information, then
it matters greatly how women participate in the programming, policy setting,
and content formations of the Net, for the information coming across the Net
needs to be contextualized both by the receiver and the sender. On the
Internet, feminism has a new transnational audience which needs to be educated
in its history and its contemporary conditions as they prevail in different
countries. For many, cyberfeminism could be their entry point into feminist
discourse and practices. While there is a great deal of all kinds of
information about feminism available on the Net (8) --and new sites are
opening up all the time--it must be remembered that the more this information
can be contextualized politically, and linked to practices, activism, and
conditions of every day life, the more it is likely to be effective in helping
to connect and mobilize people. A potent example can be seen in the Zamir
Network (Zamir "for peace") of BBS and e-mail which was created (after the
eruption of civil war in Yugoslavia in l99l) to link peace activists in
Croatia, Serbia, Slovenia, and Bosnia across borders via host computers in
Germany. The point is that computers are more than playful tools, consumer
toys, or personal pleasure machines--they are the master's tools, and they
have very different meanings and uses for different populations. It will take
crafty steerswomen to navigate these channels.
While cyberfeminists should avoid some of the damaging mistakes and
blindnesses which were part of past feminist thinking, the knowledge,
experience, and feminist analysis and strategies accumulated thus far are
crucial to carrying their work forward now. If the goal is to create a
feminist politics on the Net, to empower women, and to create new
possibilities for becoming and action in the world, then cyberfeminists must
reinterpret and transpose feminist analysis, critique, strategies, and
experience to encounter and contest new conditions, new technologies, new
formations. (Self)definition can be an emergent property which arises out of
practice and changes with the movements of desire and action. Definition can
be fluid, and need not mean limits; rather, it can be a declaration of
desires, strategies, actions, and goals. It can create crucial solidarity in
the house of difference-- solidarity, rather than unity or
consensus--solidarity which is a basis for effective political action.
A Cyberfeminist cell
How might cyberfeminists organize to work for a feminist political and
cultural environment on the Net? What are various areas of feminist research
and net activity that are already beginning to emerge as cyberfeminist
practice? The 1st Cyberfeminist International during Documenta X in Kassel can
serve as an example of a prototype cell of feminist Net organis(m)ation.
A varying and diverse group of more than thirty women--with a steady
core of about ten--worked and lived together during the CI. The women were
self-selected by open invitation to members of the FACES (women-only) mailing
list (affiliated with nettime). The main responsibilities for organizing the
CI workdays was taken on by OBN (Old Boys Network)--an adhoc group of about 6
women--in on-line consultation with all participants. Besides deciding on the
content of the CI, the OBN took care of the myriad details of housing, travel,
scheduling, technological needs, interfaces with nettime and Documenta,
budgeting and communications. Because of the open and exhaustive on-line
communications between the OBN leadership and participants, collaborative
working relationships were already established by the time the participants
met together face to face in Kassel.
From the first day this collaborative process--a recombinant form of
feminist group processes, anarchic self-organization, and rotating
leadership--continued to develop among women from more than eight countries,
and from different economic, ethnic, professional, and political backgrounds.
Each day began with participants meeting to prepare the Hybrid Workspace, work
on various task-forces (text, press, technical, final party, etc.) and
organize the public program for the day. There followed three hours of public
lectures and presentations for Documenta audiences. Afterward the closed group
met again for dinner, and to discuss common issues such as the definition of
cyberfeminism, group goals, future actions and plans. Work was divided
according to inclination and expertise; there was no duty list and no
expectation that everyone would work the same amount of hours. Space was
opened up for conviviality, impulsive actions, brainstorming, and private
time. At all times connection of participants to the FACES list was maintained
electronically. Practically all group activities were video- and audiotaped
and photographed. Many of the women brought their own computer equipment from
home and set it up in the open work/meeting space; and most of the lectures
were accompanied by projected images and readings from the lecturers'
web-sites. Two of the Russian women who were traveling to Kassel by a
circuitous, even illegal, route because of visa problems, faxed in their trip
diary all week as a performance, until they actually arrived. Another
participant taught the group how to set up CU_SeeMe_ connection and continued
to participate virtually after she had to leave. Thus there was an interesting
interplay between virtuality and flesh presence. The face to face
interactions were experienced as much more intense and energizing than the
virtual communications, and forged different degrees of affinity between
various individuals and sub-groups, while at the same time making all kinds of
differences more palpable. Brainstorming and spontaneous actions seemed to
spring more readily from the flesh meetings. The opportunity for immediate
question and answer and extended discussion after delivery of the papers also
enabled more intimate and searching interchanges than are usually possible
through on-line text only communications.
There was a wide variety of content presented in the various lectures,
web projects, and workshops: Theories of the visibility of sexual difference
on the Net; a workshop on digital self-representations of online women in
avatars, databodies; analyses of gender representations, sex-sites, cybersex,
and femporn; strategies of genderfusion and hybridity to combat stereotyping,
essentialism, and sexist representations of women; a proposal for
schizo-feminist embodiment; discussion of the fetishistic desire for
information, and the paranoia created by the new technologies; a quiz on
famous women in history; studies of differences between women and men
programmers and hackers; an examination of electronic art based on language
rather than numbers; reports on the organization and nature of webgrrls lists,
and much more (9).
The chief gains from the CI were trust, friendship, a deeper
understanding and tolerance of differences, the ability to sustain discussions
about controversial and divisive issues without group rupture, mutual
education about issues of women and the e-media, as well as a clearer
understanding of the territory for cyberfeminist intervention. Some
participants felt that too much time and energy had gone into the public
programs at the expense of more in-depth closed group discussion. But there is
much to be said for cyberfeminists being able to present their
research-in-progress to each other in this kind of discursive and experimental
format. While the CI did not result in a formal list of goals, actions, and
concrete plans, there was general agreement on areas of further work and
research. These include:
Creating a list of cyberfeminist artists, theorists and speakers to be sent
to media festivals, presenting institutions, museums, and other public venues.
Creating and publishing cyberfeminist theory, net criticism, position papers,
bibliographies, data bases, image banks.
Creating a feminist search engine which could link cyberfeminist websites;
feminist lists, country by country reports of netactivity and
cyberorganization for women.
Creating coalitions with female technologists, programmers, scientists and
hackers, to link feminist Net theory, content and practice with technological
research and invention.
Cyberfeminist education projects (for both men and women) in technology,
programming, and software and hardware design, which address traditional
gender constructions and biases built into technology.
A transnational cyberfeminist action alert site.
Creating new avatars, databodies, new self (ves) representations which
disrupt and recode the gender biases usual in current commercially available
ones.
Cyberfeminist meetings at all media festivals, activist conferences,
exhibitions, and on other occasions whenever possible.
Conclusion
"(Cyber)Feminism is a browser through which to see life." (10)
If cyberfeminism has the desire to research, theorize, work practically, and
make visible how women (and non-women) worldwide are affected by new
communications technologies, technoscience, and the masculinist, capitalist
dominations of the global communications networks, it must begin by
formulating its political goals and positions clearly. Cyberfeminists have the
chance to create new formulations of feminist theory and practice which
address the complex new social conditions created by global technologies.
Subversive uses of the new communications technologies can facilitate the work
of a transnational movement which aims to infiltrate and infect the networks
of power and communication through activist, feminist, projects of solidarity,
education, freedom, vision, and resistance. To be effective in creating a
politicized feminist environment on the Net which challenges its present
gender, race, age, and class structures, cyberfeminists need to draw on the
researches and strategies of avant garde feminist history and its critique of
institutionalized patriarchy. In order to disrupt, resist, decode, and recode
the masculinist structures of the new technologies, the tough work of
technical, theoretical, and political education has to begin. Cyberfeminists
must resist utopic and mythic constructions of the Net, and strive to work in
activist coalitions with other resistant netgroups. Cyberfeminists need to
declare solidarity with transnational feminist and postcolonial initiatives,
and work to use their access to communications technologies and electronic
networks to support such initiatives.
Notes
l. The 1st Cyberfeminist International met during the cyberfeminist workdays
in the Hybrid Workspace at Documenta X in Kassel, September 20-28, l997.
2. At Carnegie Mellon University, women students comprise about l0% of the
computer science department.
3. "Cyberfeminism with a Difference" Rosi Braidotti.
[www.let.ruu.nl/womens_studies/rosi/cyberfem.htm]
4. Sadie Plant, Zeros + Ones: Digital Women + the New Technocultures. p. 37
5. Faith Wilding and CAE, "Notes on the Political Condition of
Cyberfeminism."
6. Donna Haraway, Modest_Witness.
7. Using the term "feminism" is very different than using the term
"women"--although perhaps one should consider using the term "cyberwomanism"
which acknowledges the critique of racist white feminism so justly made by
bell hooks and others.
8. See for example the listings of l,000 feminist or women-related sites in
Shana Penn, The Women's Guide to The Wired World . New York: Feminist Press,
l997.
9. For more information and papers see [http://www.icf.de/obn]
10. Alla Mitrofanova, CI lecture.
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